A new FIFA idea is already generating massive discussion across sports and music communities. Long before a ball is kicked in the World Cup final, attention has shifted toward what could happen during halftime. If recent reports and fan speculation prove accurate, the biggest sporting event on Earth may be preparing for a major entertainment revolution.
The conversation exploded after claims surfaced that BTS could play a central role in FIFA's first-ever World Cup final halftime show. With names such as
Shakira and Madonna also being linked to the project, many fans believe FIFA is aiming far beyond football and directly at global pop culture dominance.
FIFA World Cup halftime show could give BTS a stage bigger than the Super Bowl
For decades, the Super Bowl halftime show has stood as the gold standard of live entertainment. Artists dream of performing there because the event delivers cultural relevance, social media engagement, streaming growth, and worldwide attention.
Now FIFA appears ready to challenge that model on a much larger scale.
One social media analysis that gained traction explained the scale of the opportunity:
"For the first time in World Cup history, FIFA is officially introducing a halftime show to the World Cup Finals, bringing together three acts that each represent different eras and regions of global pop culture, BTS, Shakira, and Madonna.
This could become the biggest music performance platform in the world."
It’s a simple but powerful concept. Football has a global following unlike any other sport. FIFA could use that reach, and the international appeal of the music acts it books, to create an entertainment event that goes far beyond football fans.
For BTS, whose members have built one of the most formidable fan communities in contemporary music, the stage would be another historic milestone. It would also give FIFA direct access to millions of highly-engaged viewers across multiple generations and markets.
BTS and FIFA World Cup viewership numbers highlight the scale of the opportunity
What makes the discussion so compelling is the size of the audience involved.
According to figures widely shared online, the 2022 World Cup final between Argentina and France reached an estimated 1.5 billion viewers worldwide. The tournament itself reportedly engaged around five billion people across broadcasts and digital platforms.
The same viral post drew a sharp comparison with American football's biggest night:
"The last Super Bowl in February 2025 drew approximately 127.7 million average viewers in the United States Fox, streaming platforms, and Spanish-language broadcasts. The gap is gapping"
Whether BTS ultimately headlines the show or not, the excitement surrounding the possibility reveals how sports and entertainment continue to merge. If FIFA successfully launches a halftime spectacle on the world's biggest football stage, the World Cup final could become the most valuable live performance slot in global entertainment.